Adams v. Law Ex Rel. Robinson

57 U.S. 144, 14 L. Ed. 880, 16 How. 144, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1546
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 144 (Adams v. Law Ex Rel. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Law Ex Rel. Robinson, 57 U.S. 144, 14 L. Ed. 880, 16 How. 144, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1546 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McLEAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal in chancery, from the decree of the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia.

*147 A motion is made by the appellant’s counsel for a supersedeas, on the ground that the hearing of the case in the Circuit Court was bropght on irregularly, and the decree entered in the absence of the principal counsel for the defendants below; that by reason of this, an appeal-bond was not filed within ten days from the allowance of the appeal.

Mr. May, who makes this motion, states that he is the ¿dministrator of the estate of Thomas and Edmund Law, children of John Law, who in their lifetime were parties to the suit; and that he intended to appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court, if against him ; that he had no notice of the cause being set for hearing; that he left the United States on public business, and was absent several months; that on his return he learned that a final decree had been entered against him, and that he had authorizéd no one to consent to the hearing of the cause out of its regular course.

It appears that two other counsel who appeared for other defendants, consented to the hearing in order that the cause might be taken to the Supreme Court, for ultimate decision; and these counsel understood the cause was to be appealed to the Supreme Court by consent, and that security for the money decreed to be paid would not be required. But both of these gentlemen state that, in giving their assent to the hearing, they did not represent Mr. May, not being authorized to do so.

The suit in the Circuit Court was entitled, “ Joseph E. Law by his next friend, Mary Robinson, v. Thomas Law and others, and James Adams, executor of Thomas Law.” The controversy arose under the will of Thomas Law, deceased; and among other things the court decreed that James Adams, the trustee in the cause, who had sold certain property under the order of the court and had the proceeds in his hands, exceeding the sum of sixty-one thousand dollars,- should pay over the money to the persons named in the decree, as entitled to the same. This decree was entered the 18th day of December, 1852; and an appe.al to the Supreme. Court of the United States was prayed on the same day. An appeal-bond, in the sum of two hundred dollars, was filed the 9th of December, 1853.

The twenty-third section of the act of 1789, provides, “ that a writ of error shall be a supersedeas, and stay execution in cases only where the writ of error is served by a copy thereof being lodged for the adverse party in thé clerk’s office where the record remains, within ten days, Sundays exclusive, after rendering the judgment or passing the decree complained of, until the expiration of which term of ten days the execution shall not issue in any case where a writ of error may be a supersedeas. By the second section of the act of March 3,1803, appeals are *148 declared to be subject to the same rules, regulations, and restrictions as are prescribed in law in case of writs of error.”

.Under this provision an appeal in chancery must'be perfected, by giving an appeal-bond within the ten days, to act as a supersedeas. In Wallen v. Williams, 7 Cranch, 278, the court refused to .quash an execution issued by the court below to enforce its decree", pending a writ of error, as the writ" was not a supersedeas to the decree. In the Dos Hermanos, 10 Wheat. 311, where the appeal was prayed within the five years limitation, the appeal-bond being accepted by the court after that period, was held good, as having relation to the time' of the appeal. “ The mode of taking security and the time of perfecting it,” the court say, “ are matters of discretion, to be regulated by the court.” But this cannot apply to a case, where the appeal operates as a supersedeas.. It must be brought strictly within the provisions of the law.

The appeal, in this case, was prayed on the same day the decree was entered; but the bond was not given until nearly a year afterwards. The appeal must be perfected within the ten days after the decree was entered, to operate as a supersedeas. To supersede a judgment at law, the writ of error must be filed and bond given within the ten days. And the same rule is applied by the act of 1803, to appeals in chancery.

The- tease of Hardeman & Perkins v. Anderson, 4 How. 642, is relied on as an authority under which a supersedeas may be issued in this case. Jn.that case it appeared from the record, that the writ of error was issued and bond given within ten days after the judgment,-and that the clerk of the District Court promised to transmit the record to the Supreme Court. It was transmitted, but by some delay was not received until a few days after the adjournment of the court, at the ensuing term. Before the adjournment, a certificate, of the judgment having been obtained by the plaintiff’s counsel, in the judgment, on motion the cause was, under the rule of the court,, docketed and dismissed. At the next term, on motion sustained by an affidavit, showing that the defendant in the judgment had not been negligent in the cause, it was ordered to be docketed, and a writ ..of supersedeas was. issued, not on the second writ of error which had been issued, but to give effect to the first writ. After the dismissal of the cause at the previous term, execution was issued cm the judgment, and it was" necessary, .after the cause was entered upon the docket, to supersede that execution.

It does - not appear from the facts in the" case now before us, that it can be brought within any decision of this court, Y/hat-ever may have been the understanding of the counsel who ap *149 peared in the defence, in the Circuit Court, as to an appeal of the case to the Supreme Court, by consent and without security, it is not made to appear that the counsel of the complainants assented to such an arrangement.

By the order of the Circuit Court, a.copy of the decree was served on James Adams, the trustee; and also a' rule to show cause why-.au. attachment should not issue against him for not paying over to the parties the sums of money as required by the decree. His answer to the rule was filed, and a motion being made for an attachment, it was taken under consideration, and has not yet been decided.

This Court cannot presume that- the Circuit Court, in the exercise of their discretion, will take any step in regard to the decree, which shall place the fund at hazard or beyqnd the exercise of the appellate powers of this Court.

The motion for a supersedeas, by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, is overruled.

The Court also overrule, under the circumstances, the motion of the defendant’s counsel in error, for a procedendo.

A motion is also made, by defendant’s counsel, to dismiss the appeal on the ground, “that.there is ho case, as entitled on the record; and that the real parties interested in the case, of which a record is filed, are not made parties to the appeal,”

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 144, 14 L. Ed. 880, 16 How. 144, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-law-ex-rel-robinson-scotus-1854.